Limited Edition 1 of 5
80 x 115 cm (vertical)
Giclée print on Hahnemühle Fine Art Canvas
“Art does not reproduce the visible; rather, it makes visible.”
— Paul Klee
The Story
When I first created this image I wasn’t sure what I was looking at. I saw a funny comic character – “the Snoz” – yet at the same time I felt I was travelling inside a vein. The red became blood plasma, the silver curved a needle, and those dark hollows started to look like eyes staring back at me from deep within.
I described all of this to ChatGPT and admitted I didn’t yet know what to call the work. It responded with the title “Vein with a View.” I replied, “Vein with a View breathes life into the artwork,” and suddenly everything made sense. The hollows turned into witnesses rather than shapes; the silver line became a passageway instead of a random squiggle.
Vein with a View is an abstract reflection turned inside out – a living, pulsing interior where the image, the artist and the AI are all collaborating to reveal something the camera alone can’t see. It invites you to stand in front of the work and ask not just, What am I looking at? But who might be looking back?
Limited Edition 1 of 5
80 x 115 cm (vertical)
Giclée print on Hahnemühle Fine Art Canvas
“Art does not reproduce the visible; rather, it makes visible.”
— Paul Klee
The Story
When I first created this image I wasn’t sure what I was looking at. I saw a funny comic character – “the Snoz” – yet at the same time I felt I was travelling inside a vein. The red became blood plasma, the silver curved a needle, and those dark hollows started to look like eyes staring back at me from deep within.
I described all of this to ChatGPT and admitted I didn’t yet know what to call the work. It responded with the title “Vein with a View.” I replied, “Vein with a View breathes life into the artwork,” and suddenly everything made sense. The hollows turned into witnesses rather than shapes; the silver line became a passageway instead of a random squiggle.
Vein with a View is an abstract reflection turned inside out – a living, pulsing interior where the image, the artist and the AI are all collaborating to reveal something the camera alone can’t see. It invites you to stand in front of the work and ask not just, What am I looking at? But who might be looking back?